Contents

Graphics I

When creating a video game, the first thing you'll need is graphics.

You could start with simple graphics made with Paint or a similar simple drawing program, but if you're going to take use several hours of work for your video-game, it's better to start with some nice graphics as can be your preferred game characters or the scenarios for that old game you spent hundreds of hours playing long ago.

First of all, create a folder where you'll store your work.

Sprites

A spriteset is a table of graphics with all the animations for a particular character.

1-1 Spriteset Example

You'll have to choose several spritesets. You can find a great collection of spritesets on the Internet, be it in sites as http://spritedatabase.net or simply by searching in Google Images for “sprite” and “ripped”.

When choosing your spritesets please take into account:

Views

Top, side or isometric. It's usually easier to start with side-view spritesets.

Animations

Your character should NOT be able to perform more actions than those defined in its spriteset.

Resolutions

The size in pixels of each animation (Sprite) is a good indication of the quality of the animation.

Notice that Image I corresponds to an isometric-view spriteset, without any jump animation and with a medium resolution: not as high as that found in Street Fighter II nor as low as that found in the first Super Mario Bros.

Backgrounds

Background images are the images where your game's action will take place.

1-2 Spriteset Example

You should choose several background images. Again, have a look at websites such as http://vgmaps.com, or look for them in Google Images using “scroll”, “background” and “ripped” as keywords.

Just like sprites, background images can also use one of the views listed above so be sure to choose one that uses the same view as your sprites do. As stated above, it's better to start with a side-view game.

Regarding resolution, try to not use images with a very low resolution (below 320x240 pixels) as they might not fill the screen completely but also be sure not to use images that are too big (over 4096x4096 pixels) as they use too many resources and they could decrease your game's performance. We can always rescale the graphics, but that's something we'll try to avoid as of now.

Please note that background imagess and sprites are completely different things. In ripped background images you might sometimes find enemies or items kept from the original games, those are useless to us and are called “dirty”, as you'll probably have to clean them before using them in your game.

Please note that in Image 2 can be a top-view background image, at a somewhat low resolution and that can be considered dirty if your idea is to make a game where the bushes can be cut down.

PUBLIC

We've already worked with most of Bennu's main utilities, but there's still a very important aspect of Bennu we have not dealt with that will certainly open you the doors to a very broad field of Bennu programming.

You can see that, by using PRIVATE variables, you cannot access data belonging to a process even if you know its process ID. That limitation makes it hard to guess things as simple as -for example- determining how much damage a certain shot makes in a certain enemy.

You could implement such a feature by using LOCAL variables, but this is discouraged as it modifies all the processes' varspace to hold that variable, no matter what their type is, thus increasing the amount of memory used.

To avoid that problem you can use variables with PUBLIC scope that only modify the varspace of those processes that have that variable declared. Its usage seems to be very simple and convenient but has a few rules that must be followed, as shown below.

DECLARE sentence

Although you can declare the PUBLIC variables in the same way you do with PRIVATE variables that won't generally allow us to access them, as Bennu will give that process type a pre-defined varspace and only contains some basic vars like graph, x, y, etc.

To overcome this limitation, Bennu implements the DECLARE sentence. You must use it for all the processes that declare PUBLIC variables and before the process declaration. In the example, we're going to declare some PUBLIC data for our main character and thus, before declaring its process we must add the following lines:

You can include that sentence right before declaring the main_character process. For that process, it'll be like if the variables had been declared in their PRIVATE scope but, as you'll now see, the rest of the game's processes can now access and modify them.

The data type associated to the process

The DECLARE sentence not only associates the new vars to the process but it also changes the process identifier so we can have access to them.

Up until now, the process identifier was stored in a variable of type integer (INT) and we could access its basic data (x, y, size, etc) as if it was of a TYPE variable.

This continues to be like that and you'll be able to use the identifier for the process like before but we'll now have another new data type that allows us to access all the PUBLIC variables for that process in the same way.

The new data type created by DECLARE is named after the process so in our case main_character will now also represent a valid data type. So now any process can hold a PRIVATE var of type “main_character” and have access to its basic data and all its PUBLIC variables through it.

But beware: Variables of type “main_character” and all the type vars associated to a process with PUBLIC scope vars in them cannot be modified before having a valid process identifier associated to them.

What does that mean?

That means that prior to PUBLIC variables usage, you must store a valid process identifier. For example, any enemy that wants to get the main_processes “health” variable must first declare a PRIVATE variable of type “main_character”, as shown below:

PRIVATE
main_character objective;

And second, before accessing any of the fields in objective, it must refer to the actual main_character process, and check that the proess still exists. You could do:

Once more, please note that before being able to use objective.health you must check there is a collision and therefore objective holds a valid process identifier.

And, of course, apart from collision(), you can also use get_id(), father and -in general- any other method that returns a process ID for main_character to work with the new data TYPE returned by DECLARE.